The Volokh Conspiracy
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Forum Shopping in the First Circuit
An interesting Reuters report on the new locus of lawsuits challenging the Trump Administration.
Those seeking to file legal challenges against the Trump Administration's avalanche of executive actions have largely sought friendly fora in which to bring their claims. Increasingly, this appears to mean filing suit in New England, in district courts within the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, the only federal appellate court in the nation without a single Republican appointee in active service (though there is one nominee pending).
Nate Raymond of Reuters has an interesting and informative exploration of how the First Circuit has become a forum of choice for anti-Trump Administration litigation, and includes some interesting data on how often such suits are now filed within the circuit.
A Reuters analysis found that at least 72 lawsuits challenging Trump's policies have been filed in federal courts in those four states by plaintiffs, including Democratic state attorneys general, advocacy groups and institutions targeted by the administration. Trial court judges have made at least an initial decision in 51 of those cases, ruling against Trump in 46 of them, the analysis showed.
These have included challenges to Trump's policies to restrict birthright citizenship, gut the U.S. Department of Education, revoke the legal status of thousands of migrants and fast-track deportations of migrants to countries other than their own - so-called "third countries" - including politically unstable South Sudan. . . .
The 1st Circuit, in handling Justice Department appeals of rulings by these trial judges against the president's policies, has issued 15 decisions, granting the administration's request to set aside judicial orders only three times.
The report goes on to explain why the First Circuit would be a popular circuit in which to file these suits.
While nationwide the U.S. judiciary is closely divided among judges appointed by Democratic and Republican presidents, in these four states 17 of the 20 active federal trial judges are Democratic appointees. These states fall under the umbrella of the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, whose five active judges all were appointed by Democratic presidents while a Trump nominee awaits Senate confirmation. . . .
The regional federal appellate court that has jurisdiction over the most challenges this year to Trump's policies is the one that covers Washington, D.C., as might be expected considering it is the seat of the U.S. government. But the courts under the 1st Circuit have attracted the second-most such lawsuits, according to data from Just Security, an online publication based at New York University School of Law.
The article also provides a useful explanation of forum shopping, why litigants engage in it, and how it's not new. Too often this sort of context is missing from news reports and analyses of litigation against the Trump Administration. Among other things, the report notes that the First Circuit is, in many respects, replacing the Ninth Circuit as the preferred circuit of anti-Trump litigants. As the story notes, President Trump made ten appointments to the Ninth Circuit during his first term, "reducing the likelihood that Democratic appointees would dominate its judicial panels that decide appeals."
President Trump has yet to make a single appointment to the First Circuit (which is also the smallest circuit court, with only six seats). As one might expect given its composition, anti-Trump suits have fared well within the First Circuit.
The 1st Circuit, in handling Justice Department appeals of rulings by these trial judges against the president's policies, has issued 15 decisions, granting the administration's request to set aside judicial orders only three times.
The Trump Administration has often sought Supreme Court review of the First Circuit's failure to stay or reverse district court orders entered against it.
The Supreme Court already this year on seven occasions fully or partially put on hold judicial orders against Trump policies arising out of the 1st Circuit's jurisdiction in cases concerning the Department of Education, legal status of migrants and third-country deportations.
But, the story also notes, the Trump Administration has not always been quick to appeal adverse judgments from the First Circuit. Rather, as I have highlighted in prior posts, the Administration has been selective, only seeking Supreme Court review of cases in which its complaints about district court overreach are particularly strong.
While the Supreme Court has backed the administration in some important cases this year arising from the 1st Circuit, the Justice Department has not yet asked the justices to review some other adverse rulings from judges in the region.
That means, for example, that decisions by judges in Boston and Providence, Rhode Island, remain in place blocking the administration's efforts to make changes in federal elections including limits on counting mail-in ballots, cap federal research funding to universities and disfavor arts organizations seeking grant funding because they support "gender ideology."
Just as anti-Trump litigants are being selective in deciding where to bring which cases, the Trump Administration is being selective about which cases to bring to One First Street. The result is both that a disproportionate share of suits brought against the Trump Administration are successful, and a disproportionate share of Supreme Court orders vindicate the Trump Administration's position. But if you've been following my posts on this subject, you already knew that.
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This is how we know no one believes the judges in our justice system is fair and impartial.
No one. Anyone who says otherwise is lying on purpose or out massive ignorance.
Does this include MAGAs who praise judges that let Trump violate federal law and the Constitution? Are they lying or have massive ignorance?
Perhaps "No one" and "Anyone" are too vague for a lefty.
decisions by judges in Boston and Providence, Rhode Island, remain in place blocking the administration's efforts to make changes in federal elections including limits on counting mail-in ballots, cap federal research funding to universities and disfavor arts organizations seeking grant funding because they support "gender ideology.
Good for them.
bernard11 34 minutes ago
"....because they support "gender ideology."
"Good for them."
Yes - lets destroy any possibility of the mentally ill to live a normal life. Good for you -
If the '26 election goes the way it is looking, we will have the votes to impeach both, and possibly also remove them. FOR these decisions.
"granting the administration's request to set aside judicial orders only three times"
One of those victories followed a Supreme Court order that was hard for the First Circuit to distinguish. The court might have ruled for the plaintiffs otherwise.
If Adler wants to pile on more insinuations that Trump is not going to get fair treatment in courts across the nation, let Adler step forward to explain the legal merits of Trump's antics.
But the reverse doesn't apply? Why is that?
Black heart/Golden heart theorem.
Hasn't SCOTUS being doing that enough lately?
"across the nation"
This is explicitly about courts in one circuit.
gormadoc — The insinuation is two-sided. Trump will not get favorable rulings in the First Circuit, on the one hand. Trump would get better rulings in other circuits, on the other hand.
My insinuation was less forthright than it should have been. I should have said that Trump's lawlessness is so flagrant that it ought scarcely to matter which circuit hears his cases.
If it does help Trump to have cases heard in a particular circuit, then that circuit is likely showing flagrant partisan corruption akin to that shown by Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida. No one can doubt that Trump would prefer to have her hear every case brought against him. That is an insight as damning as any can be.
The Democrats want to go where they know that the deck is stacked in their favor.
In other news, water is wet.
For a litigator to file a challenge to Trump administration lawlessness in the Northern District of Texas, unless no alternative venue is available, would likely be professional malpractice.
You forgot former Justice Breyer, who will occasionally hear cases to keep his hand in. From one side, only.
Following your posts, you are more concerned with so-called lower courts overreaching than the Trump Administration overreaching, which at best you make out as about the same thing (which is asinine given the difference in power involved etc.) or at worse you care more about the lower courts (regularly overturned by SCOTUS & repeatedly far from the final word on the matter) so-called wrongs.